Surveillance video captured a hit-and-run driver running down a nurse outside a hospital entrance in Syracuse, New York. Local media reports that police have found the car. They are still trying to locate the driver. (Dec. 10)

San Francisco city police entered the San Francisco State University Business Building at about 3:15 a.m. and arrested 23 people for misdemeanor trespassing. Ten protesters outside the building were arrested for misdemeanor unlawful assembly and resisting arrests. Here is the story.

A dashboard camera recorded a shoot-out between a suspect and two police officers in Kansas City, Missouri in which the suspect was killed in September. On Wednesday, the officers were cleared of any wrongdoing.

Judge Michael Andrews ruled that the state must pay a cosmetologist up to $150 a day to cover John Allen Ditullio's tattoes, which include a large 6-inch swastika. A new and improved Ditullio, 23, will face murder and attempted murder charges deemed as hate crimes in a Florida courtroom. Here is the story.

"We are keeping the ads because she is innocent until proven guilty," said Daniel Wilcox, Executive Director of People United to Lead the Struggle for Equality.

P.U.L.S.E. is helping to sponsor the campaign, which also bears the faces of R& B group Pretty Ricky, and Miami Northwestern Football Captain Todd Chandler.

"A lot of people in our community still trust her and are very suspiscious about the prosecution," said Wilcox.

According to a press release, Spence-Jones spearheaded the campaign in 2007, and claims to have canvassed the neighborhood passing out "HotSpot" cards with a phone number that allows residents to provide anonymous tips.

"I just thought it would be funny to share this picture," said downtown Miami resident Brad Knoefler in an e-mail. "What a crazy city we are living in!"

"I saw his picture on a newspaper and I thought it was funny," said Fairey. "I told a friend he should stencil it. He didn't, but I did ... It started as a joke."

Fairey reproduced the image and took it to the streets with stickers, put it on T-shirts and in the 90s turned it into a commercial brand named Obey.

"My art is meant to be accessible and populist," said Fairey, "I love the passion of just going around all the bureaucracy and taking it straight to the people."

Fairey used his propaganda style to create the bold iconic image of President Barack Obama commissioned during Obama's political campaign. It remains on displayat the National Portrait Gallery in Washington D.C.